Proto-Semitic language
Proto-Semitic is the reconstructed common ancestor of the Semitic languages. There is no consensus regarding the location of the linguistic homeland for Proto-Semitic: scholars hypothesize that it may have originated in the Levant, the Sahara, the Horn of Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, or northern Africa.
The Semitic language family is considered part of the broader macro-family of Afroasiatic languages.
Dating
The earliest attestations of any Semitic language are in Akkadian, dating to around the 24th to 23rd centuries BC and the Eblaite language, but earlier evidence of Akkadian comes from personal names in Sumerian texts from the first half of the third millennium BC. One of the earliest known Akkadian inscriptions was found on a bowl at Ur, addressed to the very early pre-Sargonic king Meskiagnunna of Ur by his queen Gan-saman, who is thought to have been from Akkad.The earliest text fragments of West Semitic are snake spells in Egyptian pyramid texts, dated around the mid-third millennium BC.
Proto-Semitic itself must have been spoken before the emergence of its daughters, so some time before the earliest attestation of Akkadian, and sufficiently long so for the changes leading from it to Akkadian to have taken place, which would place it in the fourth millennium BC or earlier.
Linguistic homeland
Since all modern Semitic languages can be traced back to a common ancestor, Semiticists have placed importance on locating the Urheimat of the Proto-Semitic language. The linguistic homeland of the Proto-Semitic language may be considered within the context of the larger Afro-Asiatic family to which it belongs.Some writers said that the previously popular hypothesis of an Arabian Urheimat has been largely abandoned since the region could not have supported massive waves of emigration before the domestication of camels in the 2nd millennium BC.
However, several lines of evidence indicate that important groups of early Semitic-speaking peoples originated in northern Arabia and the Syro-Arabian desert and moved into the Levant and Mesopotamia long before the widespread use of domesticated camels. From a geographical and historical perspective, the so-called Syro-Arabian Desert forms a single steppe-and-desert belt stretching from the Arabian Sea and the Persian Gulf up towards the Taurus foothills, with the Syrian steppe acting as a central corridor and gathering ground for Arab tribal groups moving between northern Arabia, the Levant and Mesopotamia from the Bronze Age into the Islamic and modern periods. The earliest securely attested Semitic languages, such as Akkadian and Eblaite, are already documented in Mesopotamia and the northeastern Levant by the mid-third millennium BCE, several centuries before the Iron Age and any firm archaeological evidence for camel-based pastoralism. By contrast, archaeozoological, archaeological and genetic studies place the regular use and full domestication of the dromedary camel as a pack and riding animal in Arabia and neighbouring regions only in the late second millennium BCE, roughly 1200–1000 BCE. This chronological gap shows that the initial dispersal of Semitic-speaking populations into the Fertile Crescent cannot be explained by reliance on camels and must instead have proceeded through earlier forms of pastoral and agro-pastoral mobility based on other livestock and overland routes.
There is also evidence that Mesopotamia and adjoining areas of modern Syria were originally inhabited by non-Semitic populations, distinct from the later Semitic-speaking tribal groups who entered these regions from the Syro–Arabian steppe. Non-Semitic toponyms preserved in Akkadian and Eblaite sources, alongside lexemes that are neither Sumerian nor early Semitic, point to one or more pre-Semitic linguistic strata in both southern Mesopotamia and northern Syria. In his classic overview of Mesopotamian civilization, Oppenheim already stressed that the material culture of early Mesopotamia “contains terms and designations that do not seem to be Sumerian and do not belong to any early Semitic language,” a formulation later taken up and systematized in discussions of a so-called “Proto-Euphratean” or related substratum to account for opaque place names, divine names and technical vocabulary.
A similar picture emerges for northern Syria: Gelb and subsequent onomastic studies have argued that many of the earliest attested toponyms there are neither Semitic nor Hurrian and therefore reflect an older, pre-Semitic population of “unknown ethnic affiliation,” with clearly West-Semitic place names appearing only in a later layer. Even at Ebla, where the language of the archives is Semitic, the onomastic and religious repertoire preserves a mixture of Semitic, Sumerian and as yet unidentified non-Semitic names that point to complex interactions with earlier populations in Syria and Mesopotamia. In contrast, references to mobile Semitic-speaking groups on the fringes of the Syro–Arabian desert and their gradual penetration into the settled river valleys belong to a subsequent horizon, representing later tribal and linguistic layers superimposed upon these older, non-Semitic inhabitants rather than the first peopling of Mesopotamia and Syria.
Levant hypothesis
A Bayesian analysis performed in 2009 suggests an origin for all known Semitic languages in the Levant around 3750 BC, with a later single introduction from South Arabia into the Horn of Africa around 800 BC. This statistical analysis could not, however, estimate when or where the ancestor of all Semitic languages diverged from Afroasiatic. It thus neither contradicts nor confirms the hypothesis that the divergence of ancestral Semitic from Afroasiatic occurred in Africa.In another variant of the theory, the earliest wave of Semitic speakers entered the Fertile Crescent via the Levant and eventually founded the Akkadian Empire. Their relatives, the Amorites, followed them and settled Syria before 2500 BC. Late Bronze Age collapse in present-day Israel led the South Semitic settlers to migrate southwards where they settled Yemen after the 20th century BC until those crossed Bab-el-Mandeb to the Horn of Africa between 1500 and 500 BC.
However, several lines of evidence suggest that the scenario just outlined concerns relatively late, historically specific phases in the spread of Semitic and does not describe the earliest movements that first carried Semitic speech into the Levant and Mesopotamia. Kitchen et al.’s Bayesian analysis explicitly dates only the diversification of the attested Semitic branches and places their common ancestor in the Early Bronze Age Levant, while also supporting a single, much later introduction of Ethiosemitic from South Arabia into the Horn of Africa in the late second or early first millennium BC, in line with the epigraphic and archaeological record for early Geʽez and the kingdom of Dʿmt. This makes the south-Arabian to Horn of Africa dispersal a secondary, first-millennium-BC development rather than a primary homeland event and leaves open the question of when and where Proto-Semitic itself diverged from Afroasiatic. As several surveys emphasize, the Syro–Arabian desert and adjacent steppe form a single ecological and tribal zone stretching from northern Arabia through Badiyat al-Sham to upper Mesopotamia, within which Semitic-speaking pastoralists are securely attested from the late third and especially the second and first millennia BC, making north Arabia and the adjoining Syrian steppe a plausible early centre for dispersals into both the Levant and Mesopotamia. On this view, any southward migrations of so-called South Semitic settlers from the Levant or northern Syria into Yemen and across the Red Sea in the late Bronze and early Iron Ages represent later waves layered over much older north-Arabian and Syro–Arabian processes of Semiticization, rather than the initial point of origin for the family as a whole.
Phonology
Vowels
Proto-Semitic had a simple vowel system, with three qualities *a, *i, *u, and phonemic vowel length, conventionally indicated by a macron: *ā, *ī, *ū. This system is preserved in Classical Arabic.Consonants
The reconstruction of Proto-Semitic was originally based primarily on Arabic, whose phonology and morphology is extremely conservative, and which preserves as contrastive 28 out of the evident 29 consonantal phonemes. Thus, the phonemic inventory of reconstructed Proto-Semitic is very similar to that of Arabic, with only one phoneme fewer in Arabic than in reconstructed Proto-Semitic, with and merging into Arabic and becoming Arabic . As such, Proto-Semitic is generally reconstructed as having the following phonemes :The reconstructed phonemes *s *z *ṣ *ś *ṣ́ *ṯ̣ may be interpreted as fricatives or as affricates, as discussed below. The fricative interpretation was the traditional reconstruction, and is reflected in the choice of signs.
The Proto-Semitic consonant system is based on triads of related voiceless, voiced and "emphatic" consonants. Five such triads are reconstructed in Proto-Semitic:
The probable phonetic realization of most consonants is straightforward and is indicated in the table with the International Phonetic Alphabet. Two subsets of consonants, however, deserve further comment.
Emphatics
The sounds notated here as "emphatic consonants" occur in nearly all Semitic languages as well as in most other Afroasiatic languages, and they are generally reconstructed as glottalization in Proto-Semitic. Thus, *ṭ, for example, represents. See below for the fricatives/affricates.In modern Semitic languages, emphatics are variously realized as pharyngealized, glottalized, or as tenuis consonants ; Ashkenazi Hebrew and Maltese are exceptions and emphatics merge into plain consonants in various ways under the influence of Indo-European languages.
An emphatic labial *ṗ occurs in some Semitic languages, but it is unclear whether it was a phoneme in Proto-Semitic.
- The classical Ethiopian Semitic language Geʽez is unique among Semitic languages for contrasting all three of,, and. While and occur mostly in loanwords, there are many other occurrences whose origin is less clear.
- According to Hetzron, Hebrew developed an emphatic labial phoneme ṗ to represent unaspirated in Iranian and Greek.
Fricatives
The reconstruction of Proto-Semitic has nine fricative sounds that are reflected usually as sibilants in later languages, but whether all were already sibilants in Proto-Semitic is debated:- Two voiced fricatives that eventually became, for example, for both in Hebrew and Geʽez, but and in Arabic respectively
- Four voiceless fricatives
- * that became in Hebrew but in Arabic and /s/ in Geʽez
- * that became in Hebrew but in Arabic and Geʽez
- * that became in Hebrew, in Arabic and /ɬ/ in Geʽez
- * that became in Hebrew, Arabic and Geʽez
- Three emphatic fricatives
The traditional view, as expressed in the conventional transcription and still maintained by some of the authors in the field is that was a voiceless postalveolar fricative, was a voiceless alveolar sibilant and was a voiceless alveolar lateral fricative. Accordingly, is seen as an emphatic version of as a voiced version of it and as an emphatic version of . The reconstruction of as lateral fricatives is certain although few modern languages preserve the sounds. The pronunciation of as is still maintained in the Modern South Arabian languages, and evidence of a former lateral pronunciation is evident in a number of other languages. For example, Biblical Hebrew baśam was borrowed into Ancient Greek as balsamon, and the 8th-century Arab grammarian Sibawayh explicitly described the Arabic descendant of, now pronounced in the standard pronunciation or in Bedouin-influenced dialects, as a pharyngealized voiced lateral fricative.
The primary disagreements concern whether the sounds were actually fricatives in Proto-Semitic or whether some were affricates, and whether the sound designated was pronounced in Proto-Semitic, as the traditional view posits, or had the value of. The issue of the nature of the "emphatic" consonants, discussed above, is partly related to the issues here as well.
With respect to the traditional view, there are two dimensions of "minimal" and "maximal" modifications made:
- In how many sounds are taken to be affricates. The "minimal affricate" position takes only the emphatic as an affricate. The "maximal affricate" position additionally posits that were actually affricates while was actually a simple fricative.
- In whether to extend the affricate interpretation to the interdentals and laterals. The "minimal extension" position assumes that only the sibilants were affricates, and the other "fricatives" were in fact all fricatives, but the maximal update extends the same interpretation to the other sounds. Typically, that means that the "minimal affricate, maximal extension" position takes all and only the emphatics are taken as affricates: emphatic were. The "maximal affricate, maximal extension" position assumes not only the "maximal affricate" position for sibilants but also that non-emphatic were actually affricates.
The evidence for the various affricate interpretations of the sibilants is direct evidence from transcriptions and structural evidence. However, the evidence for the "maximal extension" positions that extend affricate interpretations to non-sibilant "fricatives" is largely structural because of both the relative rarity of the interdentals and lateral obstruents among the attested Semitic language and the even greater rarity of such sounds among the various languages in which Semitic words were transcribed. As a result, even when the sounds were transcribed, the resulting transcriptions may be difficult to interpret clearly.
The narrowest affricate view is the most accepted one. The affricate pronunciation is directly attested in the modern Ethiopic languages and Modern Hebrew, as mentioned above, but also in ancient transcriptions of numerous Semitic languages in various other languages:
- Transcriptions of Ge'ez from the period of the Axumite Kingdom : ṣəyāmo rendered as Greek τζιαμω ''tziamō.
- The Hebrew reading tradition of as clearly goes back at least to medieval times, as shown by the use of Hebrew צ to represent affricates in early New Persian, Old Osmanli Turkic, Middle High German, Yiddish, etc. Similarly, in Old French c'' was used to transliterate צ: Hebrew ' "righteousness" and ' "land " were written cedek, arec.
- There is also evidence of an affricate in Ancient Hebrew and Phoenician. Punic was often transcribed as ts or t in Latin and Greek or occasionally Greek ks; correspondingly, Egyptian names and loanwords in Hebrew and Phoenician use to represent the Egyptian palatal affricate ḏ.
- Aramaic and Syriac had an affricated realization of until some point, as is seen in Classical Armenian loanwords: Aramaic צרר 'bundle, bunch' → Classical Armenian crar.
- Akkadian cuneiform, as adapted for writing various other languages, used the signs to represent affricates. Examples include /ts/ in Hittite, Egyptian affricate ' in the Amarna letters and the Old Iranian affricates in Elamite.
- Egyptian transcriptions of early Canaanite words with use affricates.
- West Semitic loanwords in the "older stratum" of Armenian reflect as affricates,.
- Greek borrowing of Phoenician ? to represent /s/, and ? to represent is difficult to explain if then had the value in Phoenician, but it is quite easy to explain if it actually had the value .
- Similarly, Phoenician uses ? to represent sibilant fricatives in other languages rather than ? until the mid-3rd century BC, which has been taken by Friedrich/Röllig 1999 as evidence of an affricate pronunciation in Phoenician until then. On the other hand, Egyptian starts using s in place of earlier ' to represent Canaanite s around 1000 BC. As a result, Kogan assumes a much earlier loss of affricates in Phoenician, and he assumes that the foreign sibilant fricatives in question had a sound closer to than. However, it is likely that Canaanite was already dialectally split by that time and the northern, Early Phoenician dialect that the Greeks were in contact with could have preserved the affricate pronunciation until c. 800 BC at least, unlike the more southern Canaanite dialects that the Egyptians were in contact with, so that there is no contradiction.
Evidence for as also exists but is somewhat less clear. It has been suggested that it is cross-linguistically rare for languages with a single sibilant fricative to have as the sound and that is more likely. Similarly, the use of Phoenician ?, as the source of Greek Σ s, seems easiest to explain if the phoneme had the sound of at the time. The occurrence of for in a number of separate modern Semitic languages and Old Babylonian Akkadian is then suggested to result from a push-type chain shift, and the change from to "pushes" out of the way to in the languages in question, and a merger of the two to occurs in various other languages such as Arabic and Ethiopian Semitic.
On the other hand, Kogan has suggested that the initial merged s in Arabic was actually a "hissing-hushing sibilant", presumably something like, which did not become until later. That would suggest a value closer to or for Proto-Semitic since and would almost certainly merge directly to . Furthermore, there is various evidence to suggest that the sound for existed while was still. Examples are the Southern Old Babylonian form of Akkadian, which evidently had along with as well as Egyptian transcriptions of early Canaanite words in which are rendered as .
Diem suggested that the Canaanite sound change of > would be more natural if *š was than if it was. However, Kogan argues that, because was at the time, the change from to is the most likely merger, regardless of the exact pronunciation of while the shift was underway.
Evidence for the affricate nature of the non-sibilants is based mostly on internal considerations. Ejective fricatives are quite rare cross-linguistically, and when a language has such sounds, it nearly always has so if was actually affricate, it would be extremely unusual if was fricative rather than affricate. According to Rodinson and Weninger, the Greek placename Mátlia, with tl used to render Ge'ez ḍ, is "clear proof" that this sound was affricated in Ge'ez and quite possibly in Proto-Semitic as well.
The evidence for the most maximal interpretation, with all the interdentals and lateral obstruents being affricates, appears to be mostly structural: the system would be more symmetric if reconstructed that way.
The shift of to h occurred in most Semitic languages in grammatical and pronominal morphemes, and it is unclear whether reduction of began in a daughter proto-language or in Proto-Semitic itself. Some thus suggest that weakened may have been a separate phoneme in Proto-Semitic.
Prosody
Proto-Semitic is reconstructed as having non-phonemic stress on the third mora counted from the end of the word, i.e. on the second syllable from the end, if it has the structure CVC or CVː, or on the third syllable from the end, if the second one had the structure CV.Morphophonology
Proto-Semitic allowed only syllables of the structures CVC, CVː, or CV. It did not permit word-final clusters of two or more consonants, clusters of three or more consonants, hiatus of two or more vowels, or long vowels in closed syllables.Most roots consisted of three consonants. However, it appears that historically the three-consonant roots had developed from two-consonant ones. To construct a given grammatical form, certain vowels were inserted between the consonants of the root. There were certain restrictions on the structure of the root: it was impossible to have roots where the first and second consonants were identical, and roots where the first and third consonants were identical were extremely rare.
Grammar
Nouns
Three cases are reconstructed: nominative, genitive, accusative.There were two genders: masculine and feminine. The feminine marker was placed after the root, but before the ending, e.g.: *ba‘l- ‘lord, master’ > *ba‘lat- ‘lady, mistress’, *bin- ‘son’ > *bint- ‘daughter’. There was also a small group of feminine nouns that had no formal markers: *’imm- ‘mother’, ‘ewe’, *’atān- ‘she-donkey’, *‘ayn- ‘eye’, *birk- ‘knee’
There were three numbers: singular, plural and dual.
There were two ways to mark the plural:
- affixation
- * masculine nouns formed their nominative by means of the marker *-ū, their genitive and accusative by *-ī, i.e., by lengthening the vowel of the singular case suffix;
- * feminines also formed their plural by lengthening a vowel — namely, by means of the marker *-āt;
- apophonically — only in the masculine.
The endings of the noun:
Pronouns
Like most of its daughter languages, Proto-Semitic has one free pronoun set, and case-marked bound sets of enclitic pronouns. Genitive case and accusative case are only distinguished in the first person.For many pronouns, the final vowel is reconstructed with long and short positional variants; this is conventionally indicated by a combined macron and breve on the vowel.
The Semitic demonstrative pronouns are usually divided into two series: those showing a relatively close object and those showing a more distant one. Nonetheless, it is very difficult to reconstruct Proto-Semitic forms on the basis of the demonstratives of the individual Semitic languages.
A series of interrogative pronouns are reconstructed for Proto-Semitic: *man ‘who’, *mā ‘what’ and *’ayyu ‘of what kind’.
Numerals
Reconstruction of the cardinal numerals from one to ten :All nouns from one to ten were declined as singular nouns with the exception of the numeral ‘two’, which was declined as a dual. Feminine forms of all numbers from one to ten were produced by the suffix *-at. In addition, if the name of the object counted was of the feminine gender, the numbers from 3 to 10 were in the masculine form and vice versa.
The names of the numerals from 11 to 19 were formed by combining the names of the unit digits with the word ‘ten’. 'Twenty’ was expressed by the dual form of ‘ten’, and the names of the ten digits from 30 to 90 were plural forms of the corresponding unit digits. Proto-Semitic also had designations for hundred, thousand and ten thousand.
Ordinal numerals cannot be reconstructed for the protolanguage because of the great diversity in the descendant languages.
Verbs
Traditionally, two conjugations are reconstructed for Proto-Semitic — a prefix conjugation and a suffix conjugation. According to a hypothesis that has garnered wide support, the prefix conjugation was used with verbs that expressed actions, and the suffix conjugation was used with verbs that expressed states.The prefix conjugation is reconstructed as follows:
The suffix conjugation is reconstructed as follows:
Verb stems are divided into base forms and derived. The bases consist of a three-consonant root with thematic vowels. Among the derived ones, one distinguishes stems with a geminated middle consonant, stems with a lengthened first vowel, causative stems, nouns with the prefix *na-/''*ni-, stems with the suffix *-tV-, stems that consist of a reduplicated biconsonantal root and stems with a geminated final consonant.
From the basic stems, an active participle was formed on the pattern CāCiC, the passive one on the patterns CaCīC and CaCūC.
From the derived stems, the participles were formed by means of the prefix *mu-, while the vocalisation of the active ones was a-i and that of the passive ones was a-a''
Proto-Semitic is said to have been a tense less language, using only the perfective and imperfective aspects.
The imperative mood was formed only for the second person, and the form for the singular masculine was the pure stem:
Conjunctions
Three conjunctions are reconstructed for Proto-Semitic:*wa ’and’;*’aw ’or’;*šimmā ’if’.Syntax
The Proto-Semitic language was a language of nominative-accusative alignment, which is preserved in most of its descendant languages.The basic word order of Proto-Semitic was VSO, and the modifier usually followed its head.
Lexis
Reconstruction of the Proto-Semitic lexicon provides more information about the lives of Proto-Semites and helps in the search for their Urheimat.Reconstructed terms include:
- Religious terms: *ʔil ‘deity’, *ḏbḥ ‘to perform a sacrifice’, *mšḥ ‘to anoint’, *ḳdš ‘be holy’, *ḥrm ‘to forbid, excommunicate’, *ṣalm- ‘idol’;
- Agricultural terms: *ḥaḳl- ‘field’, *ḥrṯ ‘to plough’, *zrʕ ‘to sow’, *ʻṣ́d ‘to harvest’, *dyš ‘to thresh’, *ḏrw ‘to winnow’, *gurn- ‘threshing-floor’, *ḥinṭ- ‘wheat’, *kunāṯ- ‘emmer’;
- Animal husbandry terms: *raḫil- ‘ewe’, *‘inz- ‘goat’, *śaw- ‘a flock of sheep’, *ṣ́a’n- ‘a herd of sheep and goats’, ‘to shear sheep’, *r‘y ‘to graze ’, *šḳy ‘to guide to a watering place’, *ʔalp- ‘bull’, *ṯawr- ‘buffalo’, *kalb- ‘dog’, *ḥimār- ‘donkey’, *’atān- ‘she-donkey’, *ḥalab- ‘milk’, *lašad- ‘cream’, *ḫim’at- ‘butter’;
- Terms of daily life: *bayt- ‘house’, *dalt- ‘door’, *ʕarś- ‘bed’, *kry ‘to dig’, *biʔr- ‘well’, *śrp ‘to kindle, *ʔiš- ‘fire’, *ḳly ‘to roast’, *laḥm- ‘food’;
- Technological terms: *ṣrp ‘to smelt’, *paḥḥam- ‘coal’, *kasp- ‘silver’, *ḥabl- ‘rope’, *ḳašt- ‘bow’, *ḥaṱw- ‘arrow’;
- Plants and foods: *tiʔn- ‘fig’, *ṯūm- ‘garlic’, *baṣal- ‘onion’, *dibš- ‘date honey’.